The Man Who Killed Don Quixote

Terry Gilliam’s The Man Who Killed Don Quixote has been plagued by production and development woes over the past two decades. After making headway in production last year, it seemed like the long-awaited adaptation was going to finally premiere at this year’s Cannes Film Festival. However, a news report released by France Inter (via The Playlist) informs us that the release date for the troubled film has been delayed possibly indefinitely.

The delay is due to Giliam having signed an agreement with producer Paulo Branco in 2016 for funding, but reportedly that funding never came. Gilliam instead found another producer to get started and now Branco claims that the film can’t be released until he gives permission. Gilliam, on the other hand, feels that the contract was void because there was no funding from Branco. Whichever party is right, the judgment won’t be handed down until June 15, which means the film will miss Cannes.

From DC Comics comes the Suicide Squad, an antihero team of incarcerated supervillains who act as deniable assets for the United States government, undertaking high-risk black ops missions in exchange…